Psychology Typing Instructions
Sections of a Paper
| 1. | Title Page | Required | |
| Elements | |||
| Running Head (header) - left-justified, all caps | |||
| Page Number (header) - right-justified | |||
| Title - centered, bolded | |||
| Author Byline - centered, one double-spaced line below title | |||
| Institutional Affiliation - centered | |||
| Author Note | |||
| 2. | Abstract | Required | |
| One paragraph summary of paper; no more than 250 words | |||
| Start on a new page (p. 2) | |||
| Block style (no indent on 1st line) | |||
| Keywords at bottom | |||
| 3. | Body of Paper | Required | |
| Start on a new page (p. 3) | |||
| Repeat title at top of 1st page - centered, bolded | |||
| Section headings and sub-headings properly formatted | |||
| 4. | References | Required | |
| Begin on a new page | |||
| Page heading "Reference" at the top of the page - centered, bolded | |||
| Entries alphabetized by first author last name | |||
| Use hanging indent (first line of each entry left-justified, successive lines indented 0.5") | |||
| List only works cited in-text | |||
| 5. | Supplementary Materials | Optional | |
| Includes: tables, figures, appendices | |||
| All tables/figures assigned a table/figure number, title, and note - appear in numerical order | |||
| All appendices assigned a letter - appear in alphabetical order | |||
| All supplementary materials referenced in-text | |||
Typing Instructions
| 6. | Margins | 1 inch; all must be the same size | |
| 7. | Line Spacing |
Double space all text (includes: title page, abstract, headings, references, quotations, figure/table notes) |
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| 8. | Type Size | 11-12 pt. | |
| 9. | Typeface | Acceptable Serif fonts: Calibri (11 pt.), Arial (11 pt.), Lucinda Sans Unicode (10 pt.) | |
| Acceptable Sans Serif fonts: Times New Roman (12 pt.), Georgia (11 pt.) | |||
| 10. | Paragraph indents | Indent 1st line of each paragraph by 0.5" (except abstract and long quotations) | |
| Keep indent uniform throughout paper | |||
| 11. | Justification | All paper left-justified | |
| 12. | Header | Appears on each page | |
| Running head | |||
| Left-justified | |||
| All caps | |||
| No longer than 50 characters | |||
| Page number | |||
| Right-justified | |||
| Number only (do not include p/pg/pp) | |||
| Begins on title page (p. 1) | |||
| 13. | Headings | ||
| 1st Level | Centered | ||
| Boldface | |||
| Title Case (first letter of major words capitalized) | |||
| Text begins on new line, indented | |||
| 2nd Level | Flush left | ||
| Boldface | |||
| Title Case | |||
| Text begins on new line, indented | |||
| 3rd Level | Flush left | ||
| Boldface | |||
| Italicized | |||
| Title Case | |||
| Text begins on new line, indented | |||
| 4th Level | Indented | ||
| Boldface | |||
| Title Case | |||
| Ends with a period | |||
| Text begins on same line as regular paragraph | |||
| 5th Level | Indented | ||
| Boldface | |||
| Italicized | |||
| Title Case | |||
| Ends with a period | |||
| Text begins on same line as regular paragraph | |||
| 14. | Quotations | ||
| Short | Less than 40 words | ||
| Merge quotation into text | |||
| Must be enclosed by quotation marks (single or double) | |||
| Must include source citation with author name(s), publication date, and page numbers | |||
| Long | 40 or more words | ||
| Begin on new line | |||
| Use block quotation formatting (every line indented 0.5" from left margin) | |||
| Double-spaced | |||
| End with a period, followed by source citation with author name(s), publication date, and page numbers (in parentheses) | |||
| Do not use quotation marks | |||
Referencing Material
| 15. | Level of Citation | Cite a source for each fact or idea - after every sentence, if necessary | |||
| It is better to over-cite than under-cite | |||||
| To avoid over-citation, do not repeat the same citation if source/topic have not changed | |||||
| 16. | Paraphrasing | Include citation with author name(s) and date of publication | |||
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Always keep name and date together. For example: Smith (1984) states . . . Some argue that . . . (Smith, 1984). |
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| 17. | Secondary Sources |
When citing an orginal work that is quoted in a secondary source that you have read, use the following format: Smith says that . . . (as cited in Jones, 1984, p. 324) |
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| In the reference list, use the secondary source informatin (the source that you gathered the information from) | |||||
| 18, | Multiple Citations | If more than one work is cited at a time parenthetically, alphabetize the works by authors' last names and separate the two references by a semi-colon | |||
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For example: (Jones, 2012; Smith, 1984) |
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| 19. | Number of Authors | Citation and reference formatting varies depending on the number of authors | |||
| 1-2 authors | List all authors' names every time source is cited and in the reference list | ||||
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For example: Smith and Jones (2002) . . . The researchers found that . . . (Smith & Jones, 2002). |
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| 3+ authors | List only the first author's name and et al. on every citation | ||||
| List all author names (up to 20) in the reference list | |||||
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For example: Smith et al. (2002) The researchers determined that . . . (Smith et al., 2002). |
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| 20. | Reference List | Ensure that each reference includes the necessary elements | |||
| Book | Book Chapter | Journal Article | |||
| a. ALL author names (up to 20) | * | * | * | ||
| b. Name of article | * | ||||
| c. Name of book | * | * | |||
| d. Name of chapter read | * | ||||
| e. Name of journal | * | ||||
| f. Journal volume number | * | ||||
| g. Article/chapter page numbers | * | ||||
| h. Publisher name | * | * | |||
| i. Digital Object Identifiers (DIO) | * | * | * | ||
| 21. |
Order of Elements in the Reference List |
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| Journal Article | Author(s), Date, Article title, Journal Name, Volume Number (Issue Nmber), Page Numbers, https://dx.doi.org/XXXXXXXXXX | |||||||
| Chapter | Author(s), Date Chapter Name, Editor Name(s), Book Name, (Edition, Volume, Page numbers), Publisher Name, https://dx.doi.org/XXXXXXXXXX | |||||||
| Book | Author Name(s), Date, Book Name, Publisher Name. https://dx.doi.org/XXXXXXXXXX | |||||||
| 22. | Capitalization | |||||||
| Article and book names, Chapter titles | Capitalize first letter of first word only | |||||||
| Journal Name | Title Case | |||||||
| 23. | MLA vs. APA Formatting | Differences between MLA and APA in references formatting | ||||||
| Authors' Names | Use only the initial of the first name (and middle initial, if given) and full last name for all authors | |||||||
| Order for all authors: Last name first, then first initial and middle initial | ||||||||
| Article Name | No quotes around article or chapter names | |||||||
| Book Chapter | All editor and page nmber information goes in parentheses | |||||||
| 24. |
Ampersand Use |
In parenthetical citations and references list, use the "&" symbol instead of "and." | ||||||
Punctuation
| 25. | Commas and periods go inside quotation marks. |
| 26. | Colons and semi-colons go outside quotation marks. |
| 27. | One space between words and other elements in a sentence including after: |
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Commas Semi-colons Colons Periods |
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| 28. | The final period goes after the parentheses around a citation. |
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For example: . . . (Jones, 1991). |
Correct Use of English
| 29. | Use proper, formal English. This means no slang, colloquialisms, or contractions. |
| 30. | Do not start sentences with "so," "because," "but," or "however." All of these words should be used in the middle of the sentence, after the verb. |
| 31. | Use gender-inclusive nouns and pronouns |
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For example: "police officer" NOT "policeman" "people" NOT "mankind" Singular "they" rather than "he/she," "s/he," "(s)he," "he or she," etc. when gender is unknown or irrelevant |
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| 32. | Know the differences between these word pairs and use appropriately: |
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Among & Between Affect & Effect Site & Cite |
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| 33. | Ensure the word that you want to use is correct to communicate your idea. Look up the word in the dictionary if you don't use it very often. |
| 34. | Be succinct. Do not use more words than necessary to convey an idea. |
| 35. | Sentences must contain a proper noun phrase (subject) and a verb phrase (predicate). |
| 36. | Do not run two sentences together with just a comma between them. This is called a "run-on" sentence. |
Proofreading
| 37. | Read your paper aloud slowly and carefully, watching for the things listed above as well as the following mistakes: |
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Typographical errors (e.g., left-out transposed letters/words) Straggly type that is not aligned with the other characters Inaccurate/missing reference information Nonsensical sentences Accuracy of quotations Misspelled words |
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| 38. | If you find any of the above, correct them by changing the mistakes and reprinting the page involved. |